Nyc best places to visit

Nyc best places to visit

Take in outdoor theater at Shakespeare in the Park.

shakespeare in the park's "twelfth night" opening night

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“Seeing a Broadway show is great, but if you’re in New York in the summertime, nothing beats Shakespeare in the Park. It’s a free series put on by the Public Theater in an open-air venue in Central Park, and combines astonishing performances from incredible talent with a night under the stars for an unbeatable theatrical experience.” —Adam Rathe, Senior Editor (Arts and Culture)

Following COVID-19-related shutdowns, New York City’s Public Theater brought back Shakespeare in the Park in 2021, staging a production of Merry Wives this past summer, and it returned again in 2022 with Richard III.

Visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Metropolitan Museum of Art

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“Every time I go, I encounter a room I’ve never been to before. But I never leave without visiting the medieval armor on the first floor.”—Jamie Rosen, Contributing Editor

Go for a walk in Central Park.

Central Park

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843 acres are open to visitors in America’s most-visited urban park, which was designed in 1858 by landscape architects Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux after they beat out 32 competitors for the project. Now a National Historic Landmark, the park is full of places to explore, starting with its zoo, Bethesda Fountain, the mall (shown here), and Woolman Rink. Even the Metropolitan Museum of Art technically falls within its confines.

See a show at the Park Avenue Armory.

Park Avenue Armory

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The expansive 55,000-square-foot drill hall plays host to year-round events, including the Winter Show, TEFAF New York, and its own cultural programming. But what you might not know is that visitors can tour other areas like the first-floor period rooms and restored Board of Officers Room and Veterans Room with a guide.

Due to the ongoing pandemic, all ticket holders must be fully vaccinated. To learn more about the events at the Armory, visit its website here.

Walk around the Columbia University campus.

Columbia University

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Even if your college days are in the past, you can still explore the city’s only Ivy League institution. Head out on a self-guided tour or choose one of the options with a guide, including one that covers the history, architecture, and sculpture of the Morningside Heights campus. For more architectural splendor in the neighborhood, don’t miss the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine.

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Take in a show at the Café Carlyle.

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There isn’t an Upper East Side experience more traditional than drinks at Bemelmens Bar and a show at Café Carlyle. The cabaret theater has hosted luminaries like Alan Cumming and Judy Collins since its debut in 1955.

Wander around The Cloisters.

Cloisters New York

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Located on four acres overlooking the Hudson River in Upper Manhattan’s Fort Tryon Park, this annex of the Metropolitan Museum of Art includes four cloisters and a group of reconstructed chapels and halls from medieval French monasteries and abbeys.

Check out the New York Botanical Garden.

Bronx Botanical Garden

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The 250-acre National Historic Landmark in the Bronx hosts more than a million visitors annually. One of its recent top draws? Yayoi Kusama’s Cosmic Nature exhibition, which ran through October 2021.

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Explore the history of design at the Cooper Hewitt.

Cooper Hewitt Design Museum

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America’s only museum dedicated solely to design has been a branch of the Smithsonian since the 1960s. It now has a collection of more than 210,000 design objects that span 240 years, all housed in industrialist Andrew Carnegie’s former mansion on the Upper East Side. Plan your visit here.

Tour the Frick Collection.

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The Gilded Age mansion of industrialist Henry Clay Frick is one of the most visually interesting places to visit in the city today. But for through 2023, the Frick won’t be where we’ve always known it. While the museum is being upgraded by architect Annabelle Selldorf, its treasures will be a few blocks away, in the Frick Madison, the building Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer designed for the Whitney Museum of American Art in the mid-1960s.

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Pick up cheese (and a lot more) at Zabar’s.

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“The king of the old-school appetizing shops, Zabar’s is not a deli, as you can’t order lunch. It’s not a supermarket, as there’s no produce (well, not much), and you can’t get paper towels or dish soap. But it has the best selection of cheeses on earth (not an exaggeration), many of them very inexpensive. And prepared foods. And outstanding, reasonably priced coffee. And loose tea of several dozen kinds. And who else has a lox counter—just lox, nothing else. And I haven’t even mentioned the kitchenwares department upstairs, which is one of New York’s best-kept secrets.”—James Lochart, Copy Chief

Pay a visit to Lincoln Center.

Lincoln Center

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The Metropolitan Opera, New York Philharmonic, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, and New York City Ballet all perform here. After canceling the entirety of its 2020–21 season, the Metropolitan Opera reopened in September 2021 with “Fire Shut Up in My Bones” by Terence Blanchard, the first opera composed by a Black musician to be hosted there.

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Visit the Museum of the City of New York.

MCNY

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Located at the northern end of Fifth Avenue’s Museum Mile, MCNY offers exhibitions on the city’s art and history, including “New York at Its Core,” which charts the city’s rise from a striving Dutch village to today’s “Capital of the World.”

Go to the American Museum of Natural History.

new ocean exhibit set to reopen in new york

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Founded in 1869, the American Museum of Natural History now has more than 32 million specimens and cultural artifacts in its collection. Stroll through the museum’s 570,000-square-foot space on Central Park West, which includes 45 permanent exhibit halls including dinosaur fossils, stunning dioramas, and, in the Milstein Family Hall of Ocean Life, a 94-foot-long, 21,000-pound model of a blue whale suspended from the ceiling.

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